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Internal medicine in Spain

European Journal of Internal Medicine, 2003
Patients who are seen by internists seldom have a single, well-defined nosological entity. More often they are elderly patients with marginal pluripathology who have associated chronic or terminal illness with their attendant social problems. Nowadays, the majority of patients with the most prevalent diseases fit this profile.
Jose, de Portugal, Pedro, Conthe
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General Internal Medicine in Internal Medicine: At the Core or on the Periphery?

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1992
In the past decade, faculty in sections of general internal medicine have assumed responsibility for training residents, for staffing clinical practices, and for developing new domains of health services and effectiveness research. These activities form the core of internal medicine: They are integral to the role of internal medicine as an academic and
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Activating Internal Medicine

The Physician and Sportsmedicine, 1998
Until the past few years, it seemed to me that most physicians who were trained in internal medicine, as I was, were uninterested in anything that moved faster than 3 miles per hour. Not so, now. At the American College of Physicians (ACP) annual meeting last month on San Diego's spectacular harbor, the sessions on sports medicine were jammed.
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Fundamentals of internal medicine

International Journal of Risk & Safety in Medicine, 2006
The most important diagnostic tools available to the internist are the patient history and physical examination, after which a plan must be made for further diagnostic evaluation and treatment. For this the internist uses clinical reasoning based on his or her knowledge of evidence-based medicine and pathobiology.
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Mentoring in internal medicine

European Journal of Internal Medicine, 2006
Mentoring is a relationship aimed at fostering the development of the less experienced person. The internal medicine community has recently recognized the importance of this relationship in the advancement of careers in the profession. Preliminary evidence points to the importance of mentoring in achieving the mentee's goals without much suggestion ...
Alan B, Jotkowitz, A Mark, Clarfield
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Internal Medicine in the 1930s

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1988
The Harvard Medical School set up a teaching service at Boston City Hospital in 1914; in 1923, the school added a specially endowed research facility, the Thorndike Memorial Laboratory. The combination, known as the Harvard Medical Unit at Boston City Hospital, endured for 52 years.
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The State of Internal Medicine

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1991
To the Editors: We strongly disagree with the proposal outlined by Dr. Stein (1) to increase internal medicine residency training to 4 years, for the purpose of increasing the attractiveness of gen...
Gregg Coodley, Marcia Kerensky Coodley
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The Malaise in Internal Medicine

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1977
Internists today are discomforted by uncertainty of identity, governmental interference with practice, total responsibility for patients' health, and by waning of faith in science. As personal "caring" physicians, internists are secure in primary care but should maintain their distinctive scholarly leadership as master clinicians and consultants ...
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Simulations in Internal Medicine

Disease-a-Month, 2011
imulation-based medical education (SBME) has revolutionized training n both undergraduate and graduate medical education. Over the past 2 ecades, SBME has been used and studied by the specialties to provide linical training, reduce medical errors, and improve patient safety.
Emily C, Singer, Ernest E, Wang
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